U.S. President Joe Biden last week urged
https://www.reuters.com/
world/us/biden-urge-americans-hurricane-prone-states-get-covid-19-shots-2021-08-10
Americans in southeastern states - many of which have relatively low
vaccination rates - to get their COVID-19 shots before the storm
season picks up pace, citing an increased risk of exposure if people
had to evacuate and use shelters.
Criswell, the first woman to head the Federal Emergency Management
Agency, told Reuters in an interview at FEMA's National Response
Coordination Center in Washington that the strong appeals from Biden
and other officials were starting to pay off.
"We want to make sure that you are protecting yourself, that you are
protecting your family and those that you may come in contact with,
if you have to evacuate," she said, adding that surging infections
also appeared to be playing a role in encouraging the reluctant to
get their shots.
"They're seeing the spikes in their own neighborhoods right now, and
so they're getting concerned," she said. "Whatever the reason, now
is the time to go get a vaccine."
Officials in Florida's Miami-Dade County and other areas were
reporting increased interest in vaccinations, Criswell said, urging
Americans to avoid politicizing the situation.
"Disasters aren't red, disasters aren't blue," she said, referring
to the colors traditionally associated with the Republican and
Democratic parties in the United States. "We just want to make sure
that we are putting everything in place ahead of the impact of a
storm."
She said FEMA was offering COVID-19 shots at disaster recovery
centers set up in Louisiana and Detroit after recent storms, and
would do so elsewhere. "It's important to try to meet people where
they're at," she said. "We want to make it easy for them to get
(vaccinated)."
The spread of the coronavirus has been particularly severe in
Florida and other parts of the southeastern United States, which are
bracing for major storms as the country heads into the height of the
Atlantic hurricane season.
FEMA will continue to pay for hotel rooms and other smaller-scale
shelters not normally authorized to accommodate families with small
children and others who cannot get vaccinated, said Criswell.
The agency is also working with states to provide any needed
equipment to ensure social distancing in larger-scale shelters,
especially in more populous areas.
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Criswell also said she was
keeping close tabs on Tropical Storm Henri,
which experts say could become a hurricane and
hit New England hard in coming days.
CLIMATE CHANGE
Criswell said climate change would result in more severe storms and
weather in coming years, and FEMA had a critical role to play in
reducing the impact of natural disasters.
"We are definitely seeing the impacts of climate change," she said,
citing the Dixie fire
https://www.reuters.com/
world/us/california-wildfire-crisis-escalates-amid-extreme-winds-2021-08-18,
now the largest in California's history, the crippling cold snap
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-weather-texas-power-insight/why-a-predictable-cold-snap-crippled-the-texas-power-grid-idUSKBN2AL00N
that knocked out power across Texas earlier this year, and other
severe weather events. The agency is offering an
unprecedented $5 billion to help states and local communities do
more to mitigate the risks of storms, wildfires and hazards, she
said, adding that she would fight to maintain that funding level in
coming years.
In the past, such funds had a $5 million cap, but the Biden
administration has raised that cap to $50 million, which will fund
bigger and more systemic projects, she said.
The agency is also urging more people to buy flood insurance, while
establishing more differentiated insurance ratings to ensure that
homeowners at the greatest risk are not being subsidized by others,
she said.
FEMA this week also unveiled an expanded online National Risk Index
to help local communities understand their specific risks of
flooding, wildfires or other natural disasters, and then work to
reduce them.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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